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Page 1: nyrb classics READING GROUP GUIDES - Home | The · PDF filenyrb classics READING GROUP GUIDES STONER by John Williams Introduction by John McGahern 978-1-59017-199-8 “A masterly

c l a s s i c s READING GROUP GUIDESnyrb

STONERby John Williams

Introduction by John McGahern

978-1-59017-199-8

“A masterly portrait of a truly virtuous and dedicated man.” —The New Yorker

“An exquisite study, bleak as a Hopper, of a hopelessly honest academicat a meretricious Midwestern university. I had not known. . . that thekind of unsparing portrait of failed marriage shown in Stoner existed

before John Cheever.” —D. T. Max, Los Angeles Times

ABOUT THIS BOOK

Stoner is the story of a man and his fate: his pursuit of love and his faith in the value ofhonest work. In beautiful, clear prose, John Williams writes a remarkably original, thought-ful, and moving variation on the classic American story of the “self-made man.”

William Stoner is the only son of a dirt-poor Missouri farmer who is sent to college tostudy agriculture and discovers there the life of the mind. He makes his first friends there, ismentored by an English professor who awakens in him a deep love of teaching and learning,and decides never to go back to his old way of life. But it is not so easy to leave the pastbehind—Stoner is haunted by the distance that opens between him and his parents—or tofind a way into the future. He falls in love with and marries Edith, a girl from a far moreprivileged background, but he is mystified when their marriage turns cold and uncommu-nicative, while the birth of their one child only divides them further; soon there is nothing ofhis home life left.

Stoner takes refuge in his work but has battles to wage there too. Charles Walker, a con-niving and unqualified student, has the support of Professor Lomax, a powerful member ofthe department; when Stoner upholds the principles of academic rigor and seriousness byrefusing to pass Walker, Lomax begins a lifetime of professional retaliation and personalrevenge against him. Later in life, when Stoner finds genuine love in the company ofKatherine Driscoll, a graduate student, it is Lomax who makes sure to subvert their connec-tion.

Stoner tells a seemingly simple story of ordinary life, of disappointment, compromise, andendurance. The magic of John Williams’s novel is that it transforms what would appear to bea chronicle of failure into a tale of unexpected triumph, the triumph of a man’s stoic determi-nation and dignity in spite of the destructive agencies of the world.

FOR DISCUSSION1. The first page of the book gives away the whole story, in a way, and yet it also draws youin. Is this a different approach than you’re used to? What are you curious about while youread the rest of the novel? Do you think back to Stoner’s fate while you’re reading, and doesthat change your feelings about what’s happening in the story? Do you like this kind of open-ing or not?

BIOGRAPHY

John Williams (1922–1994) wasborn and raised in NortheastTexas. Despite a talent for writingand acting, Williams flunked out ofa local junior college after his firstyear and reluctantly joined the wareffort, serving in the United StatesArmy Air Force in China, Burma,and India from 1942 to 1945. Oncehome, Williams found a small pub-lisher for his first novel andenrolled at the University ofDenver, where he was eventuallyto receive both his B.A. and M.A.,and where he was to return as aninstructor in 1954. Williams found-ed the creative writing program atthe University of Denver andremained on its staff until heretired to Arkansas in 1985. Hisother novels—amazingly varied inplot and setting—are Butcher’sCrossing, about a buffalo hunt inthe 1870s and “one of the finestnovels of the West ever to comeout of the West” (The DenverPost), and the National BookAward–winning Augustus, a his-torical novel of ancient Rome.

Courtesy of Nancy Williams

Page 2: nyrb classics READING GROUP GUIDES - Home | The · PDF filenyrb classics READING GROUP GUIDES STONER by John Williams Introduction by John McGahern 978-1-59017-199-8 “A masterly

c l a s s i c s READING GROUP GUIDESnyrb

SUGGESTIONS FOR FURTHER READING

Samuel Butler, The Way of AllFlesh

Willa Cather, My Ántonia

Willa Cather, The Professor’sHouse

F. Scott Fitzgerald, Tender Is theNight

Jonathan Franzen, The Corrections

Richard Sennett, The HiddenInjuries of Class

Wallace Stegner, Crossing to Safety

OTHER NYRB CLASSICS OFINTEREST

Butcher’s CrossingJohn Williams(introduction by MichelleLatiolais)

The Middle of the JourneyLionel Trilling(introduction by Monroe Engel)

We Think the World of YouJ. R. Ackerley(introduction by P. N. Furbank)

Mary Olivier: A LifeMay Sinclair(introduction by Katha Pollitt)

2. What do you think about Stoner’s relationship to his parents? Why does his fatherencourage him to go to school, and do you think Stoner’s decision to stay at the universityis a disappointment to his father or not? How is Stoner affected by the death of his father?

3. Edith is described as doing many unsympathetic things, but the novel also describes herown lonely, unhappy childhood [pp. 54–55], and at the end Stoner forgives her [p. 272]. Is heright to forgive her? Do you sympathize with Edith or not? Does her character seem realis-tic? Do you think the descriptions of her “war” against Stoner are fair or unfair?

4. In one of Stoner’s few confrontations with Edith, she says that she loves her husband andchild, and he realizes that she means it [pp. 125–126]. Is she telling the truth? In what way?Does that make the whole situation better or worse?

5. When Edith’s father commits suicide, her mother says mysteriously, “They were veryclose...much closer than they seemed” [p. 116]. What do you think she means by this? Howis Edith like her father?

6. Do you think Stoner is a good father to Grace? Why or why not?

7. In the book there are many beautiful descriptions of places, both outdoors and indoors,to which Stoner feels closely connected. He builds his study, for example, to define “an imagethat was ostensibly of a place but which was actually of himself” [p. 100]. Are there otherplaces that have such important meaning for him? Which places do you see in that way inyour own life?

8. What happens to turn Stoner into a good teacher, and why is this such a deep change forhim [pp. 112–113]? Are there connections between this description of authentic, enthusias-tic teaching and Williams’s style in the book as a whole?

9. Why does Stoner, in spite of all the consequences, insist on opposing Walker? What val-ues is he trying to uphold? Is he right to be so stubborn, or should he have given in?

10. Two of the most important characters in the book, Charles Walker and Dr. HollisLomax, are physically deformed. Why do you think Williams chose to make themdeformed? Do you think this deformity has a deeper meaning? Later, when Stoner is in lovewith Katherine, “it occurred to him that he had never before known the body of another; andit occurred to him further that that was the reason he had always somehow separated the selfof another from the body that carried that self around” [p. 196]. Is this related? What isStoner’s own body like? Edith’s? Grace’s?

11. Stoner says that his relationship with Katherine made him look closely at the familiar,ridiculous figure of a man having a midlife crisis and an affair with a younger woman, “butthe longer he looked, the less familiar it became. It was not himself that he saw, and he knewsuddenly that it was no one” [p. 202]. Does Stoner’s story change your view of this cliché aswell? Are there people it really does apply to? If it is true of no one, then where do clichéslike this come from?

12. Why doesn’t Stoner run away with Katherine? Do you think he should have? Why?What do you think would have happened?

13. Much of the fate of the characters in this book seems determined by their childhood. Inwhat way are people free to change or escape their upbringings? Stoner, Edith, Grace: dothey define themselves or are they determined by their pasts?

14. John Williams said in an interview that “I think [William Stoner] is a real hero. A lot ofpeople who have read the novel think that Stoner had such a sad and bad life. I think he hada very good life.” Do you agree? In what ways is Stoner’s life successful or heroic?